It’s Not You Said It, It’s You Said It: Exploring the Linguistic Mechanisms Underlying Values Affirmation Interventions at Scale

Over the last decade, psychological interventions, such as the values affirmation intervention, have been shown to alleviate the male-female performance difference when delivered in the classroom, however, attempts to scale the intervention are less successful. This study provides unique evidence on...

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Main Authors: Nia M. M. Dowell, Timothy A. McKay, George Perrett
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2021-04-01
Series:AERA Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/23328584211011611
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spelling doaj-08da8c309a904afca8b28037ab3ebb122021-05-08T22:03:25ZengSAGE PublishingAERA Open2332-85842021-04-01710.1177/23328584211011611It’s Not You Said It, It’s You Said It: Exploring the Linguistic Mechanisms Underlying Values Affirmation Interventions at ScaleNia M. M. DowellTimothy A. McKayGeorge PerrettOver the last decade, psychological interventions, such as the values affirmation intervention, have been shown to alleviate the male-female performance difference when delivered in the classroom, however, attempts to scale the intervention are less successful. This study provides unique evidence on this issue by reporting the observed differences between two randomized controlled implementations of the values affirmation intervention: (a) successful in-class and (b) unsuccessful online implementation at scale. Specifically, we use natural language processing to explore the discourse features that characterize successful female students’ values affirmation essays to gain insight on the underlying mechanisms that contribute to the beneficial effects of the intervention. Our results revealed that linguistic dimensions related to aspects of cohesion, affective, cognitive, temporal, and social orientation, independently distinguished between males and females, as well as more and less effective essays. We discuss implications for the pipeline from theory to practice and for psychological interventions.https://doi.org/10.1177/23328584211011611
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nia M. M. Dowell
Timothy A. McKay
George Perrett
spellingShingle Nia M. M. Dowell
Timothy A. McKay
George Perrett
It’s Not You Said It, It’s You Said It: Exploring the Linguistic Mechanisms Underlying Values Affirmation Interventions at Scale
AERA Open
author_facet Nia M. M. Dowell
Timothy A. McKay
George Perrett
author_sort Nia M. M. Dowell
title It’s Not You Said It, It’s You Said It: Exploring the Linguistic Mechanisms Underlying Values Affirmation Interventions at Scale
title_short It’s Not You Said It, It’s You Said It: Exploring the Linguistic Mechanisms Underlying Values Affirmation Interventions at Scale
title_full It’s Not You Said It, It’s You Said It: Exploring the Linguistic Mechanisms Underlying Values Affirmation Interventions at Scale
title_fullStr It’s Not You Said It, It’s You Said It: Exploring the Linguistic Mechanisms Underlying Values Affirmation Interventions at Scale
title_full_unstemmed It’s Not You Said It, It’s You Said It: Exploring the Linguistic Mechanisms Underlying Values Affirmation Interventions at Scale
title_sort it’s not you said it, it’s you said it: exploring the linguistic mechanisms underlying values affirmation interventions at scale
publisher SAGE Publishing
series AERA Open
issn 2332-8584
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Over the last decade, psychological interventions, such as the values affirmation intervention, have been shown to alleviate the male-female performance difference when delivered in the classroom, however, attempts to scale the intervention are less successful. This study provides unique evidence on this issue by reporting the observed differences between two randomized controlled implementations of the values affirmation intervention: (a) successful in-class and (b) unsuccessful online implementation at scale. Specifically, we use natural language processing to explore the discourse features that characterize successful female students’ values affirmation essays to gain insight on the underlying mechanisms that contribute to the beneficial effects of the intervention. Our results revealed that linguistic dimensions related to aspects of cohesion, affective, cognitive, temporal, and social orientation, independently distinguished between males and females, as well as more and less effective essays. We discuss implications for the pipeline from theory to practice and for psychological interventions.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/23328584211011611
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